…We used to get in my Dad’s ’62 Ford, sit in the driveway and drive to Florida. The trip would take ten minutes or so. If we were lucky, and quick, we could swipe the keys and turn the car on, and listen to the AM radio during our travels.

I must have listened to The Night Chicago Died, Indian Reservation and Joy to the World a million times. And a million other songs as well. When I hear a song I haven’t heard in decades, every word pops into my head, like I just heard it yesterday.

I swear there is a record changer in my brain putting those little plastic discs in the big hole in the 45 rpm singles. I would stack them ten high and let them fall onto the turntable one at a time, the crackle of scratches coming through the hi-fi a mesmerizing intro to the music to follow.

The record would drop, the little arm would move to the perfect position, then slowly lower itself onto the plastic. All ears would tune in, dead air just waiting for the needle to make contact, the anticipation so sweet. A little pop when the needle makes contact, then it would slide into a groove, and the music would start, and everything else could be forgotten.

I miss the sound of scratches on vinyl. Hated them when it was all I had, and it seemed everybody else’s records were perfectly cared for. They would hold the album cover like it was the holy bible, carefully pull the disc from the white jacket, holding just the edges of course, gently blow on the surface and gingerly place the prize onto the turntable. A record changer? Never! Not for them.

Me? I’d find a pile of albums in the corner somewhere, wonder what the heck I did with the cover, put it on and ignore the skips…

A couple of kids sat in the front seat of an abandoned car in the driveway of a run down triple decker. The eight year old girl was dirty, clothes worn out, no shoes, long, blond hair flying everywhere. Her passenger was about nine, leaning back in the seat ghetto style. When I stepped out of the rescue, they stepped out of their car, and followed us in.

Ten kids were inside, some sleeping on bare mattresses that littered the floor, some on a couch, watching cable TV on a 42″ flat-screen that dominated the room. Milk crates served as seats, cigarettes burned in two different ashtrays, themselves overflowing with butts.

“Are all these yours?” I asked, amazed. She was only about thirty-five herself.

“I take care of them.”

“Really.”

Upstairs, a nineteen year old guy lay on another filthy bare mattress, A Tupac poster above him, cigarettes burning, a pale, tattooed seventeen year old girl lying on top of him. Gangsta Rap blared from a speaker of unknown origin.

Back in the day you would need a roomful of equipment to get this kind of sound, now, I couldn’t even find the source in a ten by ten room, with nothing but a mattress, two teenagers and a Tupac poster.

Mother Hen yelled from the bottom of the stairs.

“You gotta go, you ain’t stayin here!”

“Fuck you, I didn’t do nothin!” from our patient.

“You took them fuckin pills again! I told you not to take them fuckin pills!”

The smaller children watched us, silently, a little bored. Three or four of them attached themselves to my legs. I instinctively put my arms on their shoulders, or patted their heads.

“”We were sent here for an overdose. Anybody overdosed?” I asked.

“He took some Benydryl,” said the girl laying on the alleged overdose. “It gets him high.”

Benydryl Boy looked at me, then fell asleep.

“How many did he take?”

“Just two.”

“Two?”

“Two.”

“I fuckin told him not to take any!”

The little ones followed us back down the stairs. Some found their way back onto their mattresses, some went outside to play in the busy street, two went back to their car, and closed the door.

I hope they make it to Florida.

…We would leave the car, bored with our game, and go inside. Sometimes there would be sandwiches, or some cookies, or something. Our rooms were clean, our clothes relatively new and cared for, our environment safe. We would put on some records, or watch the Creature Double Feature, and wait for our lives to get started. Even with a good home, and good parents, it’s been a difficult road, for all of us.

DennisMarrying a medic?A.J. Heightman had an excellent editorial this month in JEMS about spouses. It is well worth reading. Years ago, Brian Bledsoe wrote a similar article too - both very worthwhile. Thanks for taking the time to bring up this topic.
2018-05-20 20:17:09

JaredCode 3 PodcastI just listened to that episode and it is awesome!
2018-05-16 12:33:22

IanLife and Death on Rescue 1Life and Death it is the circle of life, from the happiest to the saddest moment of our lives, we just have to accept the reality..
2018-05-05 08:41:50

Mr618The elephant in the emergency roomAnd then we have this, which MAY help explain our frustration to those who frustrate us... Or maybe not. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=17wqbXR8nT0
2018-05-05 05:16:02

Mr618Staying Sharp!How do you convince those who say, "I joined to be a firefighter, not a damned ambulance driver?" without having to wait for a disaster (hopefully a near-miss disaster) to open their eyes?
2018-05-05 05:09:30